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Renaissance Italy

The Sistine Chapel. “After the darkness has been dispelled, our grandsons will be able to walk back into the pure radiance of the past.” (Petrarch). Renaissance Italy. Unit 3, Area of Study 1: The Italian Peninsula and the Renaissance Presenter: Nick Frigo – Genazzano FCJ College.

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Renaissance Italy

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  1. The Sistine Chapel “After the darkness has been dispelled, our grandsons will be able to walk back into the pure radiance of the past.” (Petrarch) Renaissance Italy Unit 3, Area of Study 1: The Italian Peninsula and the Renaissance Presenter: Nick Frigo – Genazzano FCJ College

  2. Approaches to Outcome 1 • Examining the Key Knowledge • Developing the Key Skills • Undertaking SAC 1 • Preparing for Section A of the end-of-year examination • ‘Thinking’ and consolidation of Key Knowledge

  3. Key Knowledge Dot Points • Different types of City-States in the 14th and 15th centuries: republic, principality, kingdom and papal state, and how they interacted economically, politically and culturally. • The economic background of Renaissance Italy: trade, industry, products, banking and commercial centres. • The concept of the ‘Renaissance’ and the growth and importance of humanist studies. • Changes and developments in renaissance art and the role of patronage in the development of Renaissance culture.

  4. Key Knowledge from the ‘Preamble’ • Worth a careful and close read IN ADDITION to the dot points . . . • Other things we can glean: • Geographical expression • Ideas and values of classical Greece and Rome • Links between ‘artistic and cultural’ changes to areas of financial success: this forces us to see the BIGGER PICTURE

  5. Tips for dealing with Outcome 1 • Don’t pigeon hole your understanding. • Look for connectedness between your knowledge – this is complex – but it needn’t be confusing (we are after all dealing with real people over a length of time). • Have a selection of case studies or SPECIFIC examples to use – e.g. knowledge of a particular city-state, knowledge of the contributions and movements of particular artists and patrons.

  6. Use of a range of evidence • A range of secondary evidence: Robert Hole, Alison Brown, A Richard Turner, John Hale • A selection of primary evidence: written primary and as well as visual primary. • Draw on such evidence SELECTIVELY – passing references NOT HUGE SLABS OF QUOTATIONS. • Realise that there is also FACTUAL evidence to consider and utilise in your responses. • In your responses over the course there is a role for ALL of these forms of evidence.

  7. Different types of City-States in the 14th and 15th centuries: republic, principality, kingdom and papal state, and how they interacted economically, politically and culturally. • Important to have a range of case studies on which you can comment – ensure an ability to compare and contrast. • Be very clear on key historical terms and use them in your responses (appropriately). • Interacted – How? When? Why? EXAMPLES

  8. Knowledge of City States • Focus on a range of different City States. • Ensure that you have illustrative factual evidence for POLITICAL, ECONOMIC and CULTURAL activity (understanding the PHYSICAL structure can also be helpful here). • What could be said for each of these for say, FOUR different City-States? • Consider reasons for DISPARATE development. • How might this have influenced the ‘development’ of the renaissance? • How might this have influenced the ‘spread’ of humanism?

  9. History of Historiography “The first person to use the term [renaissance] was the French historian Jules Michelet . . . [writing in 1855] To him the renaissance represented a progressive, democratic condition that celebrated the great virtues to be valued – Reason, Art and Beauty . . . Michelet was the first thinker to define the Renaissance as a decisive historical break with the Middle Ages . . . “(Jerry Brotton, 2006) Michelet’s own agenda his important to remain aware of.

  10. History of Historiography If the view that Michelet invented the idea of the renaissance, it is generally held that the Swiss academic Jacob Burckhardt “defined it as an Italian 15th-century phenomenon.” Much of what Burckhardt focussed on which he identified as peculiar to the renaissance he sought to highlight as a distinct difference from life in the Middle Ages. Burckhardt’s contribution was “what has become the now familiar account of the Renaissance: the birthplace of the modern world, created by Petrarch, Alberti, and Leonardo, characterized by the revival of classical culture, and over by the middle of the 16th century.”

  11. 20th century Historiography Johan Huizinga’s The Waning of the Middle Ages (1919) “looked at how northern European culture and society had been neglected in previous definitions of the Renaissance.” (Brotton, 2006) Huizinga challenged some of Burckhardt’s terminology of ‘Middle Ages’ and ‘Renaissance’.

  12. 20th century Historiography Hans Baron’s The Crisis of the Early Italian Renaissance (1955) argued that “one of the defining moments in Renaissance humanism emerged in Florence as a result of the second Milanese war.” (Brotton, 2006). In the aftermath of WWII and the social upheavals of the 1960s saw a reappraisal of the renaissance, along with all studies of the past (Feminist, Marxist, Queer).

  13. 20th century Historiography “The majority of Italians who lived in the 13th and 14th centuries never heard the word ‘Italy’. It was a country in which only the literate lived. Consciousness of its meaning arose from three sources: the classics, xenophobia and exile.” – John Larner, Italy in the Age of Dante and Petrarch (1980).

  14. 21st century Historiography “The legacy of the Renaissance in the 21st century remains as contested as ever. Since the attacks on the USA in September 2001, the rhetoric of the clash of civilisation between east and west ha taken its lead from the assumption that the renaissance represented the global triumph of the superior values of western humanity.” (Brotton, 2006)

  15. The ‘Growth’ of humanism • ‘Humanism’ was a broad movement that influenced art, culture, learning society in a variety of ways during the Renaissance. • This movement, however, did not emerge from nothing, but instead was part of a tradition and development of human civilisation. • Life in Europe before the time of the Renaissance had largely been dominated by two major traditions: one was that of classical civilisation of Greece and Rome, while the other one was Christianity. • Emerging from Greek and Roman civilisation were a range of developments and achievements that Medieval Christendom did not know how to use given that they dawned from a pagan tradition. • It was during the Renaissance that humanist scholars actually set out to redefine the relationship between Christianity and classical civilisation.

  16. Growth of Humanism • One of the earliest and most renowned humanists was the scholar Petrarch (1304-74) who located copies of the Roman Cicero who worked to resurrect classical documents and learning. • The scholars of the Renaissance admired the purity and honour of the Roman republic, rather than hold in esteem the indulgent excesses of the Roman Empire that followed it. Some humanists sought to inspire Renaissance cities with civic virtue of the Roman Republic. • Humanism grew differently in different locations – a disparate movement.

  17. Forms of Humanism • One well known group of humanists studying ancient Greek learning on the Italian peninsula at this time were the Neo-Platonists who studied in and around Florence. While their activities were based on the ideas of Platonism, they worked to combine this with Christianity. Perhaps two of the most well known Neo-Platonists were Marsiglio Ficino and Pico della Miranda (1463-94). • Neo-Platonism – humans having a ‘dual nature’. • Civic Humanism. • Humanism – contemplative or active.

  18. The ‘Importance’ of Humanism • The sort of syllabus of Renaissance schools (for arts/studia humanitatis degrees) and universities consisted of the study of Latin (for some students Greek), texts dealing with grammar, rhetoric, history, poetry, moral philosophy and civic patriotism. As Robert Hole states, “At its heart, the Italian renaissance was about Christian humanist scholars reading Latin and Greek texts.” • Inspiring good government. • Feeding changes in the arts. • Civic humanism – encouraging patronage.

  19. Proto-Renaissance • An alter piece by Giotto (c. 1311)

  20. Renaissance • The Visitation by Ghirlandaio.

  21. High Renaissance • The Holy Family by Michelangelo (1475-1564).

  22. The study of the Human Form • Leonardo da Vinci • What other areas of life did da Vinci excel in?

  23. Portraiture • Why might such images be used? • What do they suggest about the concerns, values and ideas of the time?

  24. Key Historical Concepts • Humanism • Patronage & Client • Renaissance • City-State • Republic, principality, kingdom and papal state • Disparate, Interact • Communes • Duchy • Prince • Urban Centres • Entrepot

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